Greater Anglia
Vigilance Test
30 minutes. One square. Total focus. — here is everything you need to know about the Vigilance Test before your Greater Anglia OPC assessment.
Why the Vigilance matters for Greater Anglia drivers
Greater Anglia operates services across London Liverpool Street, Essex, Suffolk & Norfolk. Greater Anglia operates passenger services from London Liverpool Street into Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk. With a recently modernised fleet and a major training programme, Greater Anglia is an active recruiter of trainee train drivers — but only those who pass the OPC psychometric assessment proceed to training — and the Vigilance Test is one of the key assessments that determines whether you will be shortlisted for the role.
High-frequency commuter operations leave no recovery time between back-to-back runs. A driver doing multiple turns on a busy suburban route must maintain consistent alertness throughout a full shift — there is no quiet period. The Vigilance Test measures exactly the baseline attention stamina that dense commuter schedules demand.
The Vigilance Test forms part of the OPC (Occupational Personality and Cognitive) battery used across all UK train operating companies, governed by RSSB standard RIS-3751-TOM. The format is identical at Greater Anglia as at any other operator — but the stakes are specific to this application.
How the Vigilance works
Test format & scoring
Vigilance Test
Part of the Greater Anglia OPC battery
A grey square sits at the centre of the screen for 30 minutes. At random intervals it briefly turns black — press the response key the instant it does. Your score reflects hits, misses, false alarms, and reaction time consistency.
What it measures: Sustained attention — the ability to maintain accurate, responsive alertness over a prolonged period when stimuli are rare and unpredictable. One of the most safety-critical cognitive traits for train drivers.
How to prepare
Preparation tips for Greater Anglia candidates
Lock your gaze on the square
Do not let your eyes drift. Any movement away from the square risks missing the next stimulus entirely.
Build up to the full 30 minutes gradually
Start with 10-minute sessions and extend by 5 minutes each time. Stamina is built, not found.
Do not second-guess yourself
If you think you saw it change, press the key. Hesitation after the fact produces misses, not caution.
Run at least three full-length practice sessions
Once is curiosity. Three times is training. Track your miss rate across sessions — it should fall.
Greater Anglia-specific tip
Practise completing the full 30 minutes without any mental check-out. The shift doesn't pause; your attention shouldn't either.
FAQ
Vigilance Test — common questions
How long is the Vigilance Test?
The standard OPC version is 30 minutes. The square changes colour a small number of times during that period — the intervals are deliberately unpredictable.
What happens if I press the key when nothing changed?
This is recorded as a false alarm. A few are normal. A high false-alarm rate indicates reactive pressing rather than accurate detection.
Is the Vigilance Test the same at all UK operators?
Yes. The WAFV is the standardised assessment used under RSSB RIS-3751-TOM across all UK train operating companies.
Can you actually improve at the Vigilance Test with practice?
Yes — measurably. The ability to sustain focused attention is a trainable cognitive skill. Multiple full-length practice runs reduce miss rates and stabilise reaction time.
Does Greater Anglia recruit trainee train drivers regularly?
Yes. Greater Anglia has run multiple trainee train driver recruitment campaigns in recent years as part of fleet expansion. Vacancies are listed on the Greater Anglia careers page.
Ready to practise?
All Greater Anglia OPC tests in one place — one payment, unlimited attempts.